Linux Server Admin Tools and GNU Benchmark Tools Directory, OpenSource Tools

Finding Open Sockets

What is a socket?

 

A socket address is the combination of an IP address (the location of the computer) and a port (which is mapped to the application program process) into a single identity, much like one end of a telephone connection is the combination of a phone number and a particular extension. Here are few commands based on lsof to list the open sockets in linux.

 

Note : Lsof is a program use to list the list of open sockets files etc. Use yum install lsof to install the packages.

 

To list all the open files/sockets (login as root)

 

 

You can also redirect the results to a file using lsof > filename.txt

 

To list all open Internet files

 

 

This is particularly useful to find which process is eating must sockets if you are getting ” Outof socket memory error

 

To know about the specific port for example TCP/UDP port 80

 

 

To list the filesystem usage (for example on /var partition)

 

 

The above will be useful to unmount the disk.

 

To find the overall socket status on Linux (ipv4 and ipv6)

 

 

Socket Buffer size can be well optimized by tuning the tcp default/rmem/wmem limits. More on http://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/linux-tcp-tuning/